PAGE EIGHT 'Fans' To Hear Coltrane Chords It has been said that one of John Coltrane's fondest desires Is to play a chord on the tenor sax, critic John Tyran once re marked in his jazz notes, "Take Five," in Down Beat Magazine. "It is also said that he does play chords," Tyran added. . Coltrane brings his off-bea night in a Jazz Club-sponsored concert. Adoration and disclaim have fol lowed jazzman John Coltrane since his early days with Miles Davis and Thelonious Monk. He has made more of an impression since 1960, when he broke with Davis and organized a group of his own. THE TERM "grapeshot" has been applied to his runs on the tenor sax often irregular and alx;,tract in sound. The rhythm section may maintain ground con tact by establishing a generally tonal and consistently rhythmic chord pattern, but Coltrane and Eric Dolphy, fellow saxophonist, themselves feel bound by no re strictions of time or space and no great obligation to the heat. This style, olten taking casual ly the requirements of a certain number of beats per bar and bars per composition, has caused Coltrane to feel the blunt of mu sical criticism. Tyran labelled the Coltrane- Doiphy sound as "anti-jazz in 1:4;1. Their "musical nonsense" in dicated a growing anti-jazz trend in avant garde music, he said. "Actually," Leonard Feather commented in a jazz column in Show Magazine, "by current anti jazz standards, they are conserva tive. Only the Coltrane-Dolphy form. which holds contact with tonality, has gained any appreci able accept a nee." COLTRANE TOOK his first im prs,ssiong from Lester Young, later Johnny Hodges and Charlie Park er, classing him with others at his time Monk, Davis and many others who have been greatly influenced by the sax sounds of Collegiate Digests Copies of The Collegiate Di gest will he distributed with tomorrow's issue of The Daily Collegian. ,tz.._ , ,. , : , : . .?.;i'..•:' , ..•!':,-''. ,- ':. - :: ,- : - .;' , ',.: , ::.::' , ::':,. OW...'' - ='.:C.iiii.Ol .g . '"e - .D.11 1 i'...: @J,: , ,..4.,..,,_,,,,:,.'..:,]•.,. 95,,,y0i0ww• Etorw g eo,,h6:-..m.vi0,.,, :.........„.,.,,,::::.,-.,..,,,,-,::::,,t.,,,,:-...,:t...,.. 1!e delightful, easy way to TRINE .FMK1,..0. , ur Improve your game 111703 w .. a „ h ~, I he play yourself Bridge Game • i,...1 , -1 crra. 1 1"'ll' zquJ rjj ')1', 1 1,1 111 0 1 &[1 4 51 11 . „0 11 . . P 1 1:1 1 U 1 H • CrJell _ msx I warzi r. , ,:_"" ._1 cosial ic „, l2) , ~ ,r rw,,,,,,,ii ... , , , i , —" , '•:( 1:wit2) ;wail ',. riot: •40 P i E,,s , , , m 321 i.c , ..4,,,,....., : _,.. -, ...T.- , • - cing lTycC7 •,, .4 Ut, - P " . • li Ei i . iiiili[ E= , - iiii t -4,.. 6 ,6 ,2, , 11 .Ft .1. C.... 1.4 PLAY • Alone • Anytime • Anywhere n ~ , ~r~ .'~ WORLD CHAMPIONS ARE. TOUR INVISIBLE PARTNERS • 3 MODELS for either Beginner or Advanced Players • Special Pocket • Detuxe Pocket • Large Masonite Each set Contains: Playing Board; • Lesson Book- and plc's ., " hands. Penn-Whelan Drugs By CLAUDIA LEVY style to Schwab at 8 Saturday "Bird" Parker. Coltrane has re corded with Davis and Monk, among others, and has cut his own sounds since the formation of his group. Nat Ilentoff notes in his book Jazz Life that harmonically, Coltrane is influencing many jazz men to improvise on more com plex combinations of chords. Col trane himself has said that the sounds of the ordinary chords in the accompaniment give him a limited background against which to work. "I just have to more of a blue print," he says. MILES DAVIS commented, "What Coltrane does, for one ex ample, is to play five notes of a chord and then keep changing it around, trying to see how many different ways it can sound." Ilentoff has also said that be cause of Coltrane, younger mu sicians have begun to realize in creasingly' that changes in their style have to occur in all three divisions of the music harmony, melody and rhythm or else lopsidedness results. Coltrane, winner of Down. Beat's Jazzman of the Year award, will be making his first appear ance at the University in Satur day's concert. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA c• •." ••••c” , "'" , - - :••• A. , ••••". % PK. , .;. , "••Nsr/V.,,,,':•;;;?^•1;1. •• ••" • •*'•:•• •',';•:1"/ec••••-ii0••••`.PW.•.'t;.•• • • ~.-c.•> • wad • •Z 4 , 4 6 $. ; ; . • •.1" • 'i t • •• a • •"i Tea v"\vnYV 3' ^ " ~~' ~..../.:,-,... 4' ': - ••,;„,, : .., ' , --- I , 42'::''• - ,, , ''.- . *::. - :n.t."... i....c...< 2. ' • • ..;.........*:it.:,.. : . , i . ....., ..i .„,... .; ''' -- • -,..< .. c * , ,;:5::- ': '-- ?... , t ' '''• Ar gi , 4s 4 ‘'-'":„.* . ---•".? '•- i4t,•' " •...: ' 4 ':/;•:• .. :;• i, -4 lEEE ...‘: , Wr , ..;,..,.;.:0: 4 .71-0,441 71 Nr4,.;,..::' .APV-r ,1 1,•' . ;. .. . <, . Cc:reefs, With„a 10tAir4 'Cif iiiMl , ..iyi:fricV , of ,oripiirftinity ~cit, 101,•:'•416arn for 04:1);:inceriVrit at taK . : AdvanCe a indata processing at'.l.Bni•*464/00j:is; rfianiff.4oture " Aki.iftif;y?itt rAngte,beYOnd.Jtca .... .. '',.. IBM' are creating: neW,areas -for ~. andrriarketsawiderabgedfdata, I . derni,e specialtieshtt,6 , xciting .: praessiOnar grOwth for, career- processilig systems ,apcl,eqiiip- new .fiekls-IBM programs include: I • minded men , and wOrnens. Op-, ment that js perl'orMingan,in-•:' company training coiirses; •fui...• -,portunities are in: •'• =, , - creasingly vital role in business; '. tion-'refiind. courses - at - nearby ''... -r- es __ rah ; ~ :. • i , , ... : ;industry, science, an govern:. universities ; an -...50 oo s,- :.and'....' JA., ment. , Across-thp-country - op- • conipally-,.paid- .cornpeti Hy . ' e • ' Development Engineering • ' .„, • : • • • . erations offer a choice of - scholarships for s full-tirne'stndv` . Maiinfaeturing Engineering ; . - •• • •- . ....„P ~, . . . . • . laboratory , and manufacturmg •at a university of your choice Programming •- , • • ~, :. , •. . • • , • • „ •• • Ma keting . • • ..„, locations in: • ~' '• • • ' ; IBM` is an • Equal OpPortunity < ' '. 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Make an appointment -, , nines a. ~._ k•• . , br otlierSciences;•Econnailes;.., —..; e '; .... th`rongh your placement officer: .. ' ' ~•• Business' Administration,' 'Ac5.,,,1...„M0re than, :190 iBM, sales and He., can ,algo'give job...additional ~. - , . counting, 'or Liberal Ait6: - ,puf -- - seryicia.„: , oifiCes ' are - - located • in . information .. on the: career 'of brochures provide the fu istor , rrip.jor eiti.eithroughOuttheV:S., ... your choice' at IBM.. ' ',. ,; . . t • L~ < Cdthpyis Censor s hip Attekke.d Censorship at state university campuses was widespread in 1962, especially in -the• Midwest, ac cording to an article by William W. Van Alstyne, professor at Ohio State University La w School. Alstyne's article, which appears in the January issue of the Uni versity of Pennsylvania Law Review, considers the extent to which the Constitution restricts the right of state university offi cia]s to bar controversial speakers from college campuses. "A considerable number of guest lecturers, formally. invited to state university campuses by recognized student organizations, have, been turned away by mem: hers of the administration, It is significant that those —to whom the student were forbidden to listen were often unpopular fig ures," Alstyne writes. The author also says that cer tain organizations, such as the American Civil Liberties Union, the National Student Association, and the American Association of University Pro(essors, have ob jected to such actions by univer sity administrations. THE NSA and the AAUP have based their arguments on policy grounds, not constitutional rights, according to the article. The American Bar Association's Com mittee on the Bill of Rights, how ever, "is of the opinion that 'no question of the Bill of Rights is involved' where university offi cials decide that spokesmen for the Communist party shall be denied access to university facili ties ordinarily available for guest speakers." Van Alstyne argues that much of what the NSA and AAUP urge on policy grounds is supported by the Constitution. He writes Interviews On Campus Marketing/Systems Engineering Science and Engineering •. .-::-•1 If you cannot attend - th -* 6 - interview, write. or. call: ' S. F. Davis; Br. .-, : -.... i Mgr.,_ IBM Corporation, 206 Main Street, Johnstown, Pa. 7-5181. =II that "the ABA Committee's posi tion with regard to Communist speakers is wrong. Settled prin ciples of constitutional law re quire a liberality in state univer, sity rules dealing with guest speakers _far beyond - what that Committee suggests or what cur rently prevails on many cam puses. ' Universities haVe difficulty with the Supreme Court test dealing with the suppression of speech, Van Alstyne writes, "They have improperly identified the kinds The Central Intelligence Agency needs respon sible women of various academic backgrOunds to fill interesting assignments in numerous foreign countries. Starting salaries range from $4llO to $4565, plus free overseas housing and many _Government benefits. Applicants must be able to type 45 wpm, and be willing to serve in most areas of, the world. Initial assignments in Washington, D.C. Overseas positions are available following both formal-arid on 7 the•job training. ' An Agency Representative will be on campus January 22 for interviews. Please see your placement offke at the earliest date for further information and for interview arrangements. IBM Jan. 24, 25 Programming OVERSEAS EMPLOYMENT FOR WOMEN . <, MEM TUESDAY, JANUARY 15, 1963 of evils that are constitutionally within their power to prevent, and have failed to develop con clusive standards by which to isolate speakers whose presence on campus will probably incite violence." ' , VAN ALSTYNE says state uni versities bar speakers on the basis of their affiliations rather than the content of speeches they plan to deliver. 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